They do plan to update the emulator later to add Steam functionality as a platform. There will be no Steamworks SDK functionality or additional Steam features. At first, there will be no difference between the version that will be on Steam and the one that we can get on their website.The Windows version will be the first to arrive (what a surpriseā¦), while the versions for Linux and macOS will arrive later.Libretro himself was in charge of break the news last Friday explaining the path that the launch will follow: It will be the largest non-commercial emulation release ever to hit the Valve store. Steam's RetroArch will be identical to what we already know As your version for Linux, which we will find on Steam will be free. Today, RetroArch is back in the news, and it's not because it released a major update, but because later this month will be available on the video game platform Steam. It was first released in 2010, but back then many of us preferred to use several separate emulators because we already knew them and because they were more intuitive. The emulator took a few years to gain fame.
Later came more versatile emulators such as RetroArch, an emulator that contains everything we need so that we can play the titles of many different consoles. Later I met others that allowed me to play consoles such as the Mega Drive, the Super Nintendo or the Master System II. The first one that I met many years ago was MAME, the emulator that allows us to play arcade machines from the 80s and 90s. Otherwise it cannot be explained that emulators are so successful. This is probably not the case at all, but it does appear to be in video games.